Psalm 10:16
The Lord is King for ever and ever: the heathen are perished out of his land.
Cross-references
In Psalm 9:5, God rebukes nations and blots out their name — the same judgment on nations as here.
In Psalm 9:15, nations sink into their own pit — illustrating the perishing of nations mentioned here.
In Psalm 146:10, the Lord will reign forever, a direct parallel to the assertion that he is king forever and ever.
In Psalm 29:10, the Lord is declared enthroned as king forever, directly matching the eternal kingship proclaimed here.
In Psalm 145:13, God's kingdom is everlasting, echoing the same truth of his eternal reign stated here.
In Psalm 93:1, 'The Lord reigns' parallels the declaration that the Lord is king forever, affirming his sovereign rule.
Psalm 94:10 speaks of God chastising the heathen — directly reinforcing the judgment on the nations.
In Psalm 44:3, the victory is attributed to God's hand — reinforcing that nations perish by His action.
In Psalm 78:55, God drove out nations to give Israel the land — a historical parallel to His judgment on nations.
In Psalm 44:2, God drove out nations to plant Israel — showing His power over nations as in this verse.
Psalm 34:16 says God's face is against evildoers to cut off their memory — paralleling the perishing of the heathen.
In Psalm 18:43-45, God makes David head over nations — a historical example of God's sovereignty over peoples.
In Isaiah 33:22, the Lord is declared our king, reinforcing the same theme of divine kingship found here.
In Jeremiah 10:10, God is called the everlasting King, directly corresponding to the eternal kingship proclaimed here.
In Lamentations 5:19, the Lord reigns forever and his throne endures, a clear parallel to this verse's declaration.
In Daniel 4:34, Nebuchadnezzar praises God's everlasting dominion, echoing the same truth of God's eternal kingship.
In Daniel 6:26, Darius declares God's kingdom never destroyed — echoing the eternal reign proclaimed here.
In 1 Timothy 1:17, Paul praises the King eternal — directly echoing the same attribute of God's everlasting kingship.
In 1 Timothy 6:15, God is called 'King of kings' — reinforcing the theme of His supreme and eternal sovereignty.
Exodus 15:18 declares the same eternal reign of the LORD — a direct echo of the kingship theme.
Hebrews 1:11 contrasts creation perishing with God remaining — echoing the eternal kingship and the fate of the heathen.